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Bezalel's avatar

I love this article.

Thank you so much for sharing and being vulnerable by opening your heart and the pages of your life for us to learn from.

I realized many years ago that in this life I am one who weaves and stirs together various influences and elements to create something new and personalized .... or even something that is remembered... once forgotten under a blanket of snow in the icy tombs of our personal and collective memories. My heart glows when I find others who recognize and embody these particular natural and creative impulses...

Even though I know this about myself I seem to continuously forget or allocate the knowing to a dusty shelf in my mental archives. But my somatic knowing keeps erupting... lol... and I am learning to attune to and honor such tendencies... thank you for a beautiful reminder.

After reading “Devoted to Death” by professor R. Andrew Chesnut ( https://global.oup.com/academic/product/devoted-to-death-9780190633332 ) I became even more interested in the history of the anthropomorphic representation of Death in various cultures. Such representation is found all over the world though Chesnut focuses his book on Santa Muerte mostly in US and Mexico. He anchored her historical and cultural roots in Europe which may surprise many.

The figure(s) now referred to as the Grim Reaper or Holy Death have deep histories and they both created and were expressions of potent life experiences and deep meaning.

Many in our modern cultures tend to intellectualize, sterilize, archive, or create a “distancing” between ourselves and the natural cycles of life especially illness, decay, and death.... However, if those who live in the illusion and striving for eternal youth were to pull our heads out of the cloud of denial and cognitive dissonance, we may discover an essential need for a more intimate exploration, representation of, or relationship to Death.

For many others in our contemporary times, Death is a neighbor, a child, a family, a village, a generation, an entire people..... an ancestor, a movement, a season, a harvest, and a promise. Then, of course, there are those of us who have one foot in each of these orientations.

Regardless of our current position, there is an essential and enfleshed human need to learn how to engage with Death ... to invite Death to tea, to dance with us through twilight, or walk with us through our gardens. Is Death a song, a letter, a form or figure? Is Death the pause between our exhale and inhale or the sinking of the sun or the moon beneath the horizon? Is Death a persona, a place, or a passage? Is Death a pilgrim, a child, a teacher, or a forgotten friend? Is Death the stone over our beloved or the whisper breeze that our body recognizes as the shift from late Summer to Fall ... or the rattle that sounds as the last leaf is released from the tree? Is Death a brick wall or a doorway... a destination or a threshold?

Your article reminds us that engaging with and exploring our relationship with Death is essential and that there is deep significance in recovering and/or creating our personal relationship with however Death manifests for us in the center of our lives. How we chose to engage such a relationship will define the type of life we live. Do we chose to live in fear or agony of impending doom and loss? Or do we chose to live our human life in a way that each moment holds mystery and creative potential? Is Death our enemy or a friend who walks with us through the garden of our lives?

Thank you for modeling a process of reorientation ... and for the reminder and invitation to reach into Mystery so that we can discover our relationship with the most dependable and intimate experiences of human existence.

Happy Grim Reaper’s Day!

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Heddy Johannesen's avatar

Thank you. I love it.

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